Science in the News: Conference Approves Stronger Sport Doping Rules

Similar documents
EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT HEARING ON DOPING 29/11/2004. The Role of WADA in the fight against doping, Tom Dielen, Director European Regional Office WADA

Shaping the future for clean sport

NATIONAL ANTI-DOPING PLAN

Speech of WADA s Vice President Prof Arne Ljungqvist. EU Conference on Anti-Doping, Athens May 13, 2009

2016 TURNING ADVERSITY INTO OPPORTUNITY DELIVERED BY PRESIDENT OF THE WORLD ANTI-DOPING AGENCY SIR CRAIG REEDIE

Wrestling May Still Be an Olympic Sport

Opening Session of the 2016 SportAccord Convention. Lausanne, 19 April 2016

Analyze the Question Type

CLEAN SPORT FOR HUMAN ATHLETES

A Global Shake-Up in Anti-Doping

THE ATHLETE S COMMITMENT by DR. PAL SCHMITT IOC Member / EP Member. Allow me to say a few words about the responsibility of the athletes now:

This week s issue: Word Generation UNIT fundamental alter conflicted substitute compound

ATHLETE GUARANTEE ANNOUNCEMENT Presented by Dr. Tim Wood January 15, 2004 BC Hall of Fame, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

ANTI-DOPING POLICY OF SINGAPORE

Story Headline: DECISION OF THE IOC EXECUTIVE BOARD CONCERNING THE PARTICIPATION OF RUSSIAN ATHLETES IN THE OLYMPIC GAMES RIO 2016

2015/16 Annual review of Drug Free Sport New Zealand

JUDICIAL AWARD DELIVERED BY THE FISA DOPING HEARING PANEL. sitting in the following composition. In the case of Kissya Cataldo Da Costa (BRA)

CANOEKAYAK CANADA ANTI-DOPING POLICY AND DOPING CONTROL PROGRAM

Athletics doping: Wada commission wants Russia ban

Blood doping is not only illegal but harmful to athletes and should be stopped. Melissa Kocher

English. wada-ama.org

IOC s Initiatives Update and Next Steps: Prevention of Competition Manipulation and Corruption

The Unfair Advantage. Literally millions of kids start playing baseball at a young age. All to reach their dreams of

FINAL ROUND SERVING UP SUPPLEMENTS GENERAL FACTS

Module 8. X, Y, and Athletes STUDENT HANDOUT. Module 8

USA SHOOTING GENERAL REGULATIONS

Tougher steroid fines for U.S. sport

play true Defining the WADA launches its Play True Generation Program

History. Pocket Guide to South Africa 2016/17. Pocket Guide to South Africa 2016/17

FRANK FREDERICKS. Session: PLENARY SESSION 3 OCTOBER Mr President, Distinguished ladies and gentlemen:

COACHES ETHICS CODE INTRODUCTION

SUBMITTED BY SIR CRAIG REEDIE, WADA PRESIDENT

What is efficient doping control?

2015 International Day of Sport for Development and Peace

Story Headline: IOC President Thomas Bach says 5th Olympic Summit agreed on full review of WADA anti-doping system.

INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE IOC DISCIPLINARY COMMISSION DECISION

USA Swimming National Team Steering Committee Policy Manual

The Canadian Policy Against Doping in Sport

IN THE SOUTH AFRICAN INSTITUTE FOR DRUG-FREE SPORT ANTI-DOPING DISCIPLINARY COMMITTE HELD AT HOLIDAY INN ROSEBANK RULING

Re: Objective Evaluation of prospective Olympic Athletes of Russia

PRINCE ALI Candidate for President of FIFA

United States Rowing Association Athlete Selection Procedure WORLD ROWING CHAMPIONSHIPS September 24-October 1, 2017 Sarasota, Florida, USA

Panel: Mr. Kaj Hobér (Sweden), President; Prof. Richard McLaren (Canada); Mr. Michele Bernasconi (Switzerland)

Scottish Rugby. Anti Doping Report 2016/17

ISSF ANTI-DOPING COMMITTEE 2017 TEST DISTRIBUTION PLAN

Guide to developing an effective Athletes Commission

PURE PERFORMANCE IN SPORT: ANTI-DOPING

NEW ZEALAND ICE FIGURE SKATING ASSOCIATION

ANTI-DOPING REGULATIONS

Dietary Supplements Q&As

Show doping the red card!

NATURAL BODYBUILDING COMMUNITY SURVEY RESULTS. OPEN NOVEMBER 13, 2017 DECEMBER 15, 2017

MINEPS VI Working Group III Protecting the Integrity of Sport Lausanne 15 November 2016

Legal aspects fairness, fault and football

USA SWIMMING ATHLETE SELECTION PROCEDURES 2018 IOC Youth Olympic Games October 1-12 Swimming March 1, 2017

SA INSTITUTE FOR DRUG FREE SPORT (SAIDS) ANTI DOPING DISCIPLINARY HEARING

June 5, STATEMENT OF SCOTT BLACKMUN Former CEO, United States Olympic Committee

INDEPENDENT COMMISSION OVERVIEW

How to Help Your Kid Become a Champion

Going! Going! Gone! Your favorite slugger just hit a game winning homerun and you re

PHILIPPINE OLYMPIC COMMITTEE (POC) Athletes Commission Term of Reference (TOR)

International Olympic Committee Russian Doping

Opening remarks for the International Forum for Sports Integrity. 15 February Check against delivery-

Decision. the FIBA Disciplinary Panel established in accordance with Article 8.1 of the FIBA Internal Regulations governing Anti-Doping in the matter

International Paralympic Committee Athlete Classification Code. November 2015

You may have heard this word used in sporting circles and in the media. While some of what you know about doping might be true, it is important to

Business Plan World Taekwondo Europe

Tougher steroid fines for U.S. sport

INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE IOC DISCIPLINARY COMMISSION DECISION

INSIDE OUT - Matching The Fix: Good Governance In sports

Terra Ceia Christian School. Athletic Handbook

Corporate Banned Substances Statement Banned Substances Q& A

SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL BOXING ORGANISATION

2015 FIFPro sports law conference legal legends in sport and the future of sports law. The role of athletes in delivering the good governance of sport

AFFIDAVIT OF PAUL SCOTT. I, Paul Scott, under penalty of perjury, declare and state: 1. I am forty-five (45) years old and was born on May 31, 1967.

STRUCTURE OF THE IIHF

Cranbrook Sports Club Cranbrook Rugby Football Club

Sports Policy in the International Context: Starting from Scratch on Drug Testing

John McEwen MBE. John McEwen MBE. FEI Presidential Campaign Manifesto. Biography

2017 AMERICAN MASTERS WEIGHTLIFTING CHAMPIONSHIPS NOVEMBER 9-12, 2017 SAVANNAH, GEORGIA, USA

Fans of American football have weathered a season of scandal, with claims of

FINA RULES ON THE PREVENTION OF THE MANIPULATION OF COMPETITIONS

AIBA History. AIBA reaches the great number of 203 Member National Federations 1964

Taking biathlon into a new era Olle Dahlin

National Collegiate Taekwondo Association PO Box Berkeley CA

SCOTTISH RUGBY UNION ANTI DOPING REPORT

IPC Athlete Classification Code. Rules, Policies and Procedures for Athlete Classification. July 2015

SQ BY-LAWS. SQ By-Laws (amended November 2010) 1

International Island Games Association The Sports and Sports By-Laws

Updates on the Hong Kong Anti-Doping Programme. Yvonne YUAN, PhD Head of Office, HKADC

Nordic Swimming Federation

IOC Regulations on Female Hyperandrogenism

Doping in sport relevant changes in the WADA code. Dr Chris Milne, Sports Physician Hamilton NZ

Panel: Mr Hans Nater (Switzerland); President; Mr Dirk-Reiner Martens (Germany); Mr Raj Parker (United Kingdom)

European Cycling Union - Cycling

Scottish Rugby Anti Doping Report

WEIGHTLIFTING FEDERATION OF AFRICA

Football Operations:

SWIMMING SOUTH AFRICA SWIMMING SQUAD SELECTION CRITERIA COMMONWEALTH GAMES - DELHI OCTOBER 2010

INTERNATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE IOC DISCIPLINARY COMMISSION DECISION REGARDING VITA PALAMAR BORN ON 12 OCTOBER 1977, UKRAINE, ATHLETE, ATHLETICS

Transcription:

Science in the News: Conference Approves Stronger Sport Doping Rules Representatives of anti-doping agencies from around the world met last month in the South African city of Johannesburg. The meeting was called so that the delegates could discuss proposals to reform sport doping rules. The conference followed evidence of doping in almost every sport. The World Anti-Doping Code is the central document of the World Anti-Doping Agency, the WADA. The code lists the anti-doping policies and rules for athletic competitions. It was last amended in 2009. The WADA has held meetings over the past 18 months about possible changes to the document and other anti-doping rules. In September, a WADA committee approved changes to the code and presented them to the Johannesburg meeting. Conference delegates approved the changes. The amendments were then presented to the WADA Foundation Board for final approval. Every member of the board voted to accept the changes. The new World Anti-Doping Code will take effect in January 2015, more than a year before the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Anti-doping officials say they hope the new rules will help make that event the cleanest Olympics ever. John Fahey is the chairman and president of the WADA. He supports the changes. We now have more intelligent and comprehensive testing programs in place that I believe will be further enhanced upon the ratification of the revised code. We have a code compliance reporting process and numerous educating tools available to help stakeholders, and inform and guide the youth of the world. More than 2,000 amendments were suggested. But some delegates are not sure they will have any more effect than the rules established in 2009. The changes include a four-year suspension from competition for athletes who knowingly take banned substances to improve their performance. Coaches and trainers who help athletes break the rules will also be punished. The new code says testing and punishment of those suspected of doping should be done within acceptable human rights principles. And it says investigations and intelligence-gathering should be combined with testing of athletes. Other changes include making the code shorter and clearer, and balancing the interests of international sports partnerships and national anti- 1 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

doping organizations. The new code would also give laboratories the right to test for substances other than those requested by testing officials. Hezekiel Sepeng is the Grassroots and Development Athletes Coordinator at Athletics South Africa. He notes that many poor athletes in Africa eat foods that could cause them to fail some tests for banned substances. He says anti-doping officials should create a strong campaign to help such athletes understand the doping dangers caused by some of the foods they grew up eating. Education, education, education -- we need to educate our athletes, with all the things that are changing. You know these things should not only change up there, especially in Europe or in symposiums, and should filter down to rural areas. There is a reason Hezekiel Sepeng feels strongly about this issue. He was South Africa s first black Olympic medalist. He won the silver medal in a surprise ending to the 800-meter race at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. But he was banned from competition in 2005 after he failed a test for a banned substance. He says the laboratory made a mistake. We will hear more from him later in the program. After the Johannesburg conference approved the changes, some critics feared the new rules might be too strong. But others wondered if they were strong enough. WADA officials say they believe the new code will make it more difficult than ever before for athletes to cheat with performanceenhancing drugs. One change is the doubling of the ban in cases of intentional doping from two to four years. Another is punishment for trainers and supporters of the athletes who help them cheat. The Code also punishes athletes who refuse to help in doping investigations. However, those who do help may be punished less than those who do not. John Fahey of the WADA says the new Code is strong but fair. We ve got stronger sanctions for those who intentionally dope. We've also got greater flexibility when it comes to sanctioning of athletes. All has been done with fair consideration of human rights with an understanding of the principle of proportionality. There will be greater emphasis on intelligent processes in the future, and on investigations, investigations in particular are seen as essential if we are to do what we must do as effectively as we can. 2 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

He also told VOA the new code will protect athletes from developing countries from their competitors in richer countries. It applies equally to athletes no matter what country they come from, what sport they re involved in, whether they re male or female. It says you will be treated equally if you offend under the rules known as the anti-doping code. What I say to those in emerging nations is that they ought to go forward with confidence, knowing [that] if there are cheats in bigger countries, stronger countries, the likelihood is that they will be caught, because we are becoming more effective. So there may not well be the disadvantage they think there is. Mr. Fahey noted that it was the athletes themselves who asked for stronger punishments. The overwhelming majority of athletes around the world who said, there must be tougher penalties. The standard two-year penalty that we ve been used to so far is not good enough in the eyes of athletes. The punishment doesn t particularly suit what they believe is important to stamp out cheating. David Howman is the secretary-general of the WADA. He says the idea of a four-year-long ban was first discussed 10 years ago. The learning since then, and the desire, I think, of many clean athletes is that we should have looked at it again. So we did that, we started this process in 2012, we asked everyone what they thought. We had a huge amount of consensus to the implementation of a four-year penalty. Travis Tygart heads the American anti-doping agency. He supports the new code. But he says anti-doping agencies in each country must enforce them. It s a Lamborghini without an engine. If we don t have the resources and the people to put in place, then it s going to go nowhere, and that s a failure for clean athletes and the integrity of sport if we allow that to happen. Now, as promised earlier, we talk with former Olympian Hezekiel Sepeng of South Africa. In 1996, he became the country s first black athlete to win an Olympic medal. The way I ran, this is not normal because, at one stage, I was last. When the bell went, I was last... See now, I get goose bumps, eh. 3 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

But one drug test changed his life. With one positive test result in 2005, he went from being a hero to being strongly criticized. The runner says the laboratory made a mistake. Officials disagreed and banned him from competition for two years. The ban ended his athletic career. Today, the 39- year-old athlete works with the South African athletics federation, and operates an organization that helps needy children. His message to the children is clear: Cheating, it s not good in sports. And our kids, especially you know in countries like South Africa, most of the countries in Africa, we still need to teach our kids about doping. Hezekial Sepeng was just one of many athletes who watched closely as the World Anti-Doping Agency strengthened its anti-doping rules. Doping scandals have hit many sports in recent years. Top athletes like American cyclist Lance Armstrong and baseball player Barry Bonds have been accused of using illegal performance-enhancing substances. Supporters of disabled and poor athletes say there is little education on doping in many countries and the new code does not deal with that problem. They say this lack of education may lead to athletes taking drugs or eating foods that cause them to test positive for banned substances. They call this accidental doping. Yet the former head of the WADA, Dick Pound, says he does not believe there is such a thing as accidental doping. The agency s director-general, David Howman, explained Mr. Pound s comments. The issue that was raised by Mr. Pound has come from his experience in anti-doping and the fact that he chaired a committee that we held to look at the effectiveness of testing. And he has a very strong belief that far more athletes than concede intentionally dope. And therefore the category of what he refers to as accidental dopers is a small one. Now, I have been quoted for many years saying we have two categories of dopers, the dopey dopers who may be in the category that Mr. Pound described, and the sophisticated dopers. And it s no surprise to me that he should use those terms. I think that what we need to look at very closely as we go forward, and this is mirrored in the code review, is the way to deal with the sophisticated the doper, the intentional doper. Mark Cooper heads the International Committee of Sports for the Deaf. He says it may be true that accidental doping does not happen. But he says inadvertent doping does. He says some athletes may take substances they should not for a number of reasons. He spoke about Terence Parkin, a well- 4 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

known South African swimmer. Mr. Parkin cannot hear and is unable to read words in their correct order because of a condition called dyslexia. Terence won a silver medal in swimming at the Athens Olympic Games and continues to compete. Terence is deaf and Terence is also dyslexic. So, would somebody please explain to me how I am expected to read to Terence the list of banned substances? It is just not possible. And yeah, it is reasonable to ask the athlete to have a common sense approach and to check everything, but you know, there are still parts of the world there where are high illiteracy rates. How can we expect somebody who is illiterate to read the ingredient list on a can of protein powder? Hezekiel Sepeng says lack of education and understanding leads many young athletes to use banned substances. The former Olympian says he knows of many athletes who have accidentally taken such substances in their food or drink. He says there is one solution: education. We need to teach our athletes. That means those athletes, they have to learn. There is the rules, man. There is rules. I understand we are from different cultures, but there is rules, we need to make sure, especially what we drink, what we eat. 5 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

Conference Approves Stronger Sport Doping Rules - Quiz 6 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

7 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

8 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

9 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013

10 learningenglish.voanews.com Voice of America December 17, 2013